Earnings Season Ends On A Down Note. Next Up: Rates, Risk, And Rotation

Nvidia (NVDA) earnings failed to ignite tech, signaling a rotation into the equal-weight S&P 500 (RSP). With inflation sticky and labor data on deck, focus is shifting from AI growth to broader economic risks and Fed policy.

Last week, earnings season “ended” with a disappointing reaction to the much anticipated Nvidia (NVDA) earnings.

However, the market’s reaction to Nvidia’s earnings, and the less-covered economic news, gave the savvy investor information that clarifies the market narrative and helps anticipate the direction of the next market trend.

A few of the highlights we'll cover this week include:

  • Last week Nvidia was the main event, and it surprised many in unexpected ways - great report, bad price action. Active traders know that this is not a good combination if you want the stock to continue rising.
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    However, as we’ll explain below, collateral damage wasn't indicative of a catalyst that would send the market significantly lower.
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  • With Nvidia's report concluding the bulk of the earnings season, investors’ focus on day-to-day earnings news will diminish. The season’s data supported the bulls' case that the market is on a sound earnings growth foundation.
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    As you can see in the chart below by FactSet, both the MAG 7 stocks and the other 493 S&P 500 stocks delivered strong earnings and better than expected results.
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    Below, we’ll look at earnings expectations, which are at the core of the market’s angst in the tech sector.

  • Last week, there was important economic news relating to growth and inflation, which sets the stage for the important news coming this week.
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    As we’ll explain below, the ISM data may have an insightful signal of growth in it, and the PPI data has a pattern that, at best, contradicts hopes of lower inflation in the near term.
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    It’s been a long time (2022) since we’ve had back-to-back core PPI readings, adding the level in this chart below.


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  • Healthy growth data and firm inflation data are NOT the environment that would send the 10-year (IEF) and 20-year (TLT) bond ETFs to their highest levels since October 2024 and October 2025, respectively, yet that’s what happened.

    Clearly, there’s something bigger on the minds of bond investors.
    The short answer is a “flight to safety.”

  • This week, we get the non-farm payrolls, the unemployment rate, and other key labor statistics that the marketplace closely monitors, shaping the market narrative for the weeks that follow.Last month’s report set the stage for this data series to be in a condition that would put the Fed in a very tough spot to argue for more rate cuts, but at the same time offset concerns of the Fed pausing for a more extended time

The Current Context

A year ago, a big beat on EPS and revenues, along with a better-than-expected improvement in guidance by Nvidia, would have surprised the market and sent it and the market soaring higher.

Those days didn't end last week; they ended two quarters ago.

In the chart below, you can see prior earnings days marked with magenta vertical lines.

If you're familiar with MarketGauge’s indicators of real motion, triple play leadership, and volume trend, you'll notice that in each of the last three earnings announcements, they were not particularly bullish and, in some cases, quite bearish going into the report.

So while Nvdia has been knocking it out of the park with the growth of its business, the market’s appetite for it and other AI leading stocks has diminished.

The changing environment isn’t a secret. The MAG 7 stocks, represented by the ETF MAGS can be seen struggling since last October in the chart below. The magenta horizontal lines represent Nvidia earnings dates for context.

While the Magnificent 7 stocks struggled because of the market's concern over their excessive capital expenditures and potential pressure on future margins, AI became an even bigger headwind to other areas of the market.

Friday's close is the first time since last May that MAGS has closed under its 200-day moving average.

In what has been labeled as "AI derangement syndrome", by market strategist Ed Yardeni, AI is now viewed as a threat to many stocks, industry groups, and even the economy.

The most prominent example of this has been the implosion of enterprise software stocks as represented by the ETF IGV shown below.

Certainly, smarter software, more rapid software development, new technology needs, and more could pose a threat to legacy software companies.

However, there are a few simple reasons to suspect that it's time to expect the market to sort out the real losers from the collateral-damaged stocks.

  1. Last week, as the market was selling Nvidia, it was buying IGV.

  2. The shorter term real motion (10/50) has a divergence at the low and has turned green on the bounce (shown in chart above).

  3. Sentiment is extremely bearish (too bearish?) as demonstrated by the chart provided by Goldman Sachs below, which shows institutions increasing their short exposure in the area. This isn’t just selling to get out of the way, it's betting there is more downside.

  1. Last week’s low around $76 has been a bottom three other times in the last two years.

  2. The weekly chart has a bullish volume pattern, and the price sits at the 200-week moving average.

If IGV trades over $83 with some basic confirmation tactics, the bounce is likely to begin. More opportunistically, it would be time to focus on the best stocks in the group.

Why Isn’t The Whole Market Falling?

On many days, the news sounds dire because the cap-weighted, most popular tech stocks are under pressure, but as we’ve been pointing out for weeks here. This is not the same bull market that began years ago, and the broader market is still strong.

This is most obviously demonstrated by the equal-weight S&P 500 index ETF (RSP) shown below. It closed at an all-time high on Friday.

Even parts of tech are strong. For example, Nvdia’s home turf, semiconductors, has remained a leading group. You can find the chart below and most major sectors in the Big View Sector Summary section

Both Real Motion charts in SMH are weak, so any break below the 50 DMA in price would be dangerous, but as of right now, SMH is a fw percent and 2 days away from its highs.

Earning Season Supported A Broader Bull Market

Earnings season delivered solid results beyond the Mag 7 as shown in the chart above. Looking forward analyst are raising EPS estimates in the quarters Q2 – Q4 2026 as shown in the chart below.

Revenues also continued to accelerate into last quarter as shown below.

What To Keep An Eye On

Analysts expect EPS to grow through 2026 (as shown above), but they expect revenue growth to decelerate (as shown below). That said, the expected growth rate is still well over 7%, which remains elevated relative to the last several years.

Is The Economy About To Surprise To The Upside?

Last week, there was important economic news relating to growth and inflation, which sets the stage for the important news coming this week.

The strength of the economy, which will impact the expectations for revenue and EPS growth, is debatable, but it has continued to surprise skeptics.

Earlier this month, the ISM Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) hit its highest level since 2022 and unexpectedly jumped over 50, which is the level that divides expansion from contraction.

Last week, this strength was supported by the Chicago PMI, which registered its second consecutive strong month. Chicago is viewed as a leading indicator for the ISM.

Investors have digested the idea that the Fed is not likely to cut rates for the next several months with no real conviction of when the cut will come. In this scenario profit growth and economic growth are critical.

These are even more important if inflation remains “sticky” since that would make it more difficult to justify cutting rates.

Last week, Core PPI reported the highest back-to-back reading we’ve seen since 2022.

Additionally, non-core PPI registered back-to-back elevated readings shown below.

The concern isn’t the level so much as the potential development of an upward trend and that it makes the Fed’s decision to lower rates more difficult if economic growth is in question.

The Next Big Data Point

That leads us to this week's labor market reports.

The market is already spooked by the idea that AI is going to wipe out jobs, so a number weaker than expected may get extra attention.

However, last month non-farm payrolls (shown below) recorded a much higher than expected number of jobs (130k vs an expectation of 66k). While this is a welcome surprise, the month-to-month numbers are not only volatile but also questionable given the disruptions of the recent government shutdown.

Expectations for Friday’s report are 58k, which would not change the chart's trend below, but another 100k+ number would.

The Wild Card of War

It’s no surprise that the U.S. and Israel started a war with Iran this weekend, but there is also no reliable expectation for how this conflict will evolve or be resolved.

Historical safe havens (the U.S. dollar, Treasury Bonds, gold, etc.) and scarcity-driven resources (oil) are likely to be bid up initially. Stocks are a tougher call in the short-term, but a longer-term perspective suggests the war is less of a concern than the primary drivers of stock prices – consumer spending and corporate profits.

Of course, a war can have an impact if it affects the primary drivers of the market, but be careful not to jump to conclusions, overestimate its impact, or underestimate consumers' and corporations' ability to adapt and thrive regardless.

In times of high uncertainty, like now, it's important to have a plan, the discipline to follow it, and risk-management rules to ensure you adapt if needed.

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